In a nutshell, we got the son off to college, got to help
cover part of the presidential campaign, considered a career change, respectfully
turned down offer for career change, traveled to Florida, New York, Minnesota
and Washington, celebrated our 25th anniversary, chaperoned the
marching band and accepted a new role at work. And, today I got a iPad.

As all this was going on, the Mets fell apart, R.A. Dickey
won 20 games, the Tigers knocked the Yankees out of the playoffs (sweet!), the Tigers
collapsed in the World Series, Jason Bay got banished, R.A. Dickey won the Cy
Young Award, David Wright signed a long-term contract, the Mets unveiled new
alternative jerseys and caps, Jose Reyes and half the Marlins got traded to the
Blue Jays and then R.A. Dickey got traded to the Blue Jays, too.

Throughout this, good friend Greg Prince encouraged me to
work through these trying times with the keyboard, and I appreciate that. And,
he was tired of seeing the Gnome of Defeat bobbing in the surf as the Nationals
continued pounding on the Mets.

So, for better or worse, we are back. You can blame Greg.

I thought it would be appropriate to announced our presence
with authority with a glorious Deezo Friday Five.

The rebranding of the Gnome of Defeat

We learned something during the Mets trials and
tribulations. It’s a lot more fun the photograph the gnome than the Flag of
Victory.

For one thing, he’s a lot easier to smuggle into places like
the Liberty Bell Pavilion than the flag. And, he’s just too happy and cool to
be always associated with defeat. If the Mets are going to turn things around,
as we all hope, we’d see less and less of the gnome and his antics and travels.

So, as of today, the Gnome of Defeat is reborn as the Gnome
of Victory and Celebration! Yes! The Gnome of Victory and Celebration can make
appearances after Mets win a game, but also to note other things that make us
happy.

Mr. Met on batting practice caps

Yes, batting practice caps are generally useless and exist
to try and pry more dollars from fans who must have everything.

The last three versions have flat-out sucked, designed to
fit no one well and made of material that looks all lumpy and frumpy.

Usually, news of new batting practice caps is met with
ridicule or hostility, sometimes both.

But this week, MLB rolled out new designs for each team –
and most look pretty cool. The Braves and Yankees are exceptions. Atlanta for
reasons known to no one resurrected an yelling Indian head design from the
1970s that will serve only to reignite the whole debate over Indian team names
and logos.

The Yankees design is horrible because it is the Yankees.

The Mets, however, actually recalled the team’s colorful
history and added Mr. Met to the cap. He appeared on the uniform just once
before – on the giant NY faux-backs best remembered for the David Wright
beaning.

Coupled with the new blue alternate jerseys, and it seems
the Mets are continuing to attempt to please their fans. The Gnome would celebrate
this.

Awesome Christmas gift collection!

My baseball-loving nephew Zack keeps his eye out for things
for Uncle Dave all year and at Christmas presents me with a bag of glorious
things.

This year’s bag contained: A Normal
Cornbelters fleece blanket and All-Star Game cap and Diet Coke snuggie, a bat
and cards from the Peoria Chiefs, and schedule and program from the Las Vegas
51s -- the Mets' new Triple-A team -- an ornament from the Joliet Jammers, two
sets of cool glass snowmen ornaments wearing Mets colors, two packs of 1990
Topps -- and an autographed book from Denny McLain.

Plus, he gave me several cards from
the 1970 Topps World Series subset and Gil Hodges, the 1971 Topps Gil Hodges,
and a 3D Kellogg’s Tom Seaver card!

Thank you, Z-Man!

Baseball books for Christmas

The McLain book, “I Told You I Wasn’t
Perfect,” – with the personalized autograph – was one of several cool baseball
books I found under the tree this year.

First, my Dad sent John Grisham’s “Calico
Joe.” I don’t usually read fiction, but Caroline made me break that rule with
the three “Hunger Games” books before I could see the movie, so we’ve already started
down that slippery slope.

Then, my son gave me R.A. Dickey’s “Wherever
I Wind Up,” written while he was still a Met. I know, the book has been out
since spring training. But, as discussed, we’ve been dealing with a lot of
stuff.

Finally, I opened Greg’s “The
Happiest Recap – First Base: 1962-1973.” This was confiscated after the box
arrived from Amazon and wrapped.

Greg’s recounting 500 glorious wins.
I love Jim Haines’ jacket design showing Shea with the beloved orange and blue
panels. It would be cool if each of the four volumes showed Shea in its various
decors and then Citi Field, but I’m leaving that to the experts.

Christmas music

I can’t go cold turkey on Christmas
music once Dec. 26 arrives. I love it too much.

I’m one of those people who starts
looking for news of the new Christmas releases in early October, begins
tinkering with new iTunes playlists around Thanksgiving and launch into full
jingle mode by Dec.1. That’s way too early to set up decorations – we have
rules – but I can’t resist the music.

I’ll start tapering off this week, and will be done tapering by, well, May.

Each year it seems a different
Christmas CD dominates the iPod. Last year it was Jars of Clay’s “Christmas
Songs” augmented by some live tracks.

This year it was David Crowder*Band’s
“Oh For Joy.” It came out last year, but got lost in the shuffle. But after the
great iTunes meltdown and computer crash, the EP got heavy rotation this year.

Crowder’s a quirky guy, and does
nothing the way you expect it should be done. I don’t like all of his stuff, but I
love this disc. The bluegrass version of “Angels We Have Heard on High” is a
lot of fun, and he even manages Trans-Siberian Orchestra’s “Carol Of The Bells / Christmas Eve
(Sarajevo 12/24)” with the appropriate bombast.

But I’m
enjoying “The First Noel,” with its mix of aggressive drums and lilting
guitar.He weaves the chorus from Leonard
Cohen’s “Hallelujah” into "O Holy Night."

Everybody is
going to start returning Christmas CDs to the library this week. Put a hold on “Oh
For Joy,” throw it on your iTunes and forget about it until next December.
Trust me.